Hardware and design Design , although the curvature of the screen is toned down in comparison. The Galaxy S6 line retains similarities in design to previous models, but now uses a
unibody frame made of
aluminium alloy 6013 with a glass backing, a curved bezel with chamfered sides to improve grip, and the
speaker grille, as well as the
3.5mm headphone connector was moved to the bottom next to the
MicroUSB 2.0 type B charging port, located there for the first time in the
Samsung Galaxy S series. The Galaxy S6 was also available in a limited
Iron Man edition, in promotion of
Avengers: Age of Ultron, with six additional colour options. The S6 carries some regressions in its design over the S5; it does not contain a
MicroSD card slot, and reverts to a micro-
USB 2.0 port from
USB 3.0.
Hardware The Galaxy S6 line is powered by a 64-bit
ARMv8 Exynos 7 Octa 7420
system-on-chip, consisting of four 2.1 GHz Cortex-A57 cores, and four 1.5 GHz Cortex-A53 cores, and 3 GB of
LPDDR4 RAM for the S6 and S6 Edge while 4 GB of LPDDR4 for the S6 Edge+, being the first Samsung flagship phones to utilize 64-bit processing. The processor is Samsung's first to use a
14 nm FinFET manufacturing process, which the company stated would improve its energy efficiency. It is available with 32, 64, or 128 GB of non-expandable storage, implementing
Universal Flash Storage (UFS) 2.0 standards. It is the first device in its series that uses UFS instead of
eMMC. The Galaxy S6 line supports both the
Qi and
Power Matters Alliance wireless charging standards. For the first time in a Samsung flagship device, a bundled slow-motion video editor allows viewing custom parts of the recorded footage at adjustable speeds and exporting it for sharing. The front-facing camera was also upgraded from 2.1 megapixels to 5 megapixels, supports 1440p video recording for the first time on a
Galaxy S series device, and also features an aperture of f/1.9 and being equipped with HDR viewfinder for the first time in a front camera. The fingerprint scanner in the home button now uses a touch-based scanning mechanism rather than swipe-based. Double-pressing the Home button launches the camera app, while it launched
S Voice, then Samsung's digital assistant software, on Samsung flagship phones released between 2012 and 2014. The design of the camera software has been changed. Changes include the introduction of swipe gesture controls for accessing camera modes and gallery and a camera mode selector that is a
flat two-row icon+label grid. Additional camera modes can be downloaded. The Android Marshmallow update added manual camera controls.
Software Operating system The S6 and S6 Edge were initially released running
Android 5.0.2 "Lollipop" while the S6 Edge+ was initially released running
Android 5.1.1 "Lollipop" with Samsung's
TouchWiz software suite. TouchWiz has been streamlined on the S6 with a refreshed,
minimal design and fewer bundled applications. Several
Microsoft apps are bundled, including
OneDrive,
OneNote and
Skype. The heart rate sensor can also be used as a button for dismissing calls and sending the caller a canned text message reply.
Accessibility The single-handed operation mode, an
accessibility feature introduced with the 2013
Galaxy Note 3 and available on the
Galaxy S5 and
Note 4, is present on the S6 Edge Plus while missing on the S6 and S6 Edge. If enabled in the settings, it is accessible with three home button presses rather than a previously used swipe gesture, and shrinks the screen's view port size to facilitate single-handed usage. Unlike previously, the viewport size is fixed (not resizeable) and can only be located in two fixed spots in either lower corner rather than being freely movable. The on-screen navigation and volume keys, as well as selected
app and
contact shortcuts (S5 only) have been removed.
Samsung Pay The S6 was the first Samsung device to include
Samsung Pay, a
mobile payments service developed from the intellectual property of LoopPay, a
crowdfunded startup company that Samsung acquired in February 2015. Samsung Pay incorporates technology by LoopPay known as "
magnetic secure transmission" (MST); it transmits card data to the pay terminal's swipe slot using an
electromagnetic field, causing the terminal to register it as if it were a normally swiped card. LoopPay's developers noted that its system would not share the limitations of other mobile payment platforms, and would work with "nearly 90%" of all
point-of-sale units in the United States. The service will also support
NFC-based mobile payments alongside MST. Credit card information is stored in a secure token and payments must be authenticated using a fingerprint scan. Samsung Pay was not immediately available upon the release of the S6, but enabled in the middle of 2015.
Multi-window While flagship devices since the
Galaxy S III support splitting the screen to show two applications simultaneously, the Galaxy S6 is the first
Galaxy S series phone to support floating pop-up multi windows. The multi-window user interface is similar to that of the
Galaxy Note 4, but applications are launched out of a dedicated split-screen app drawer (accessed through holding the task key or tapping an icon in
recent apps drawer) instead of a floating side bar, which means that although floating pop-up windows can float on top of applications not supported by multi-window, the split-screen app launching interface requires an unsupported application to be minimized first in order to be accessed, to allow launching a multi-window supported app. Multi-window applications can also be launched by holding down an app listed in the view of
recently accessed apps that is accessed using the task key that is located on the left next to the home button.
Miscellaneous The Galaxy S6 is the first Samsung flagship device to offer a
torch toggle shortcut in the drop-down quick control menu instead of a home screen widget, making it accessible quicker and without having to leave an opened app. == Reception ==